Read Starting From Scratch Online
Authors: Georgia Beers
Tags: #Fiction, #Lesbian, #Romance, #Erotica
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Georgia Beers
Steve was his usual laidback self when I got home that
afternoon, lounging in a square of sunlight cast onto the
carpet from the sliding glass door, like always.
I let him outside into the yard where he did his usual
“perimeter sniffdown.” My backyard was small but I had a
white, four-foot picket fence on either side, just like
everybody else. When I first adopted Steve from the
pound, I bought a roll of two-foot high chicken wire-type
stuff to run across the back of the yard, connecting the
pickets on either side. Steve wasn’t a jumper but he was
part terrier and I worried that he might take off on me.
e chicken wire fencing was more for my peace of mind
than anything else, and of course, Steve could plow right
through it if he was so determined. Instead, he tended to
wander along the fence with his nose to the ground, check
out every inch of his very own twelve by twelve square of
the world, then plop down on the cement of the patio and
bake himself in the sun. It was still cool and the breeze
offset the heat of the sun nicely, so I suspected he’d be out
there for a while.
An hour later, I was parked in my favorite reading
chair, a glass of zinfandel on the end table next to me, the
latest Mary Higgins Clark novel open in my hands.
I glanced out the window to see if Steve had burnt
himself to a crisp.
And I froze.
“Oh, crap.”
Steve was sitting at the end of the yard, along the
chicken wire part of the fencing. On the other side, also
sitting, but with his arm dangling over the chicken wire
and moving gently along Steve’s dark, wiry fur, was little
Max from my tee-ball team.
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Starting From Scratch
Wondering if I were seeing things, I squeezed my eyes
shut, then opened them again. What was he doing there?
Was he visiting a friend? ere were two kids on the swing
set in the center of the courtyard, but they paid him no
mind whatsoever and I had to conclude that they didn’t
know him.
Steve stretched out and rolled over so Max could
scratch his belly, a move that seemed to delight the boy as I
could hear him giggle through the glass of my door. I
groaned out loud, suddenly realizing the most logical
explanation for Max’s presence. Had he and Cindy moved
into the newly sold townhouse down the block? I
muttered, “No, no, no,” under my breath; I didn’t want Max
to know I lived here. I mean, I liked the boy and all, but
my house was my sanctuary and I didn’t want it invaded by
some messy kid I barely knew leaving his fingerprints on
my sliding glass door and leftover grape jelly in my dog’s
fur. Not to mention, the thought of Slick Cindy being so
close gave me an instant, uneasy case of the jitters.
I watched him for a good fifteen minutes as he loved
up my dog. en, out of sight and earshot, somebody must
have called for Max because I heard him shout, “Coming!”
He gave Steve a final pat, then a quick kiss on the head,
which made me smile; I couldn’t help myself. I slipped out
the door and watched him. Sure enough, he bee-lined
directly for the seventh door down from mine, four
buildings down, and went inside.
I spent most of the next day, my Monday off for the
Memorial Day weekend, skulking around my own living
room as Max showed up three different times throughout
the day to visit with Steve. I supposed it made sense if
Cindy was spending the holiday unpacking that he might
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Georgia Beers
be running around, exploring his new territory and trying
to stay out of his mom’s way.
Practice on Tuesday went surprisingly well. While I
expected the kids to be restless and distracted having just
come off a long weekend, they actually paid close attention
and gave me a commendable amount of effort. Brittany
with the helicopter mom had definitely practiced over the
long weekend, because she made contact left and right
with the ball. She didn’t hit far, but she hit it every time.
e way her face lit up at the
whack
of bat on ball made
my heart warm and I thought,
is is why Maddie loves to
coach.
I was finally understanding, finally getting it. And it
did feel good, I had to admit. I felt…accomplished. Like
I’d taught these young kids something totally and
completely new and they were enjoying it. It must be how
teachers felt when their lesson was finally grasped, when all
the hard work paid off and the student got an A on an
important exam. It must have been how a parent felt when
she let go of the back of the bike seat for the first time and
her child squealed with glee at the realization that he was
pedaling a two-wheeler all by himself and not falling.
Exhilarating was a good description.
Still not something I wanted to do on a regular basis,
but it was all right.
I took my time packing up the equipment, glad
beyond belief when Max got into the car with both
Gabriel and Mikey. Not having to rebuff Cindy meant I
could hold on to my good mood.
I decided to splurge for some take-out and swung by
my favorite ai place. I arrived home, fed Steve, and let
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Starting From Scratch
him out. I fixed my plate, poured a glass of Pinot Grigio,
snagged two chocolate chip cookies from the stash I didn’t
take to work, and headed out to sit on my patio and enjoy
the unseasonably warm almost-June evening.
And wanted to kick myself for letting my guard down.
Max was already sitting in his usual spot on the other
side of the chicken wire, running his fingers through
Steve’s fur. My dog barely worked up the energy to glance
in my direction. I stood like a deer caught in the headlights
and when Max looked up, I knew escape was impossible.
“Coach King!” He stood up, his dark eyes bright with
excitement. “What are you doing here?”
Swallowing back the defeated sigh, I replied, “I live
here.” I set my plate and glass down. “What are
you
doing
here?”
“Me and my mom just moved into a new house.” He
pointed vaguely in the direction of the previously for sale
townhouse, confirming my suspicions.
“I see.”
“Is this your dog?” he asked.
Nope, never seen him before in my life, why don’t you take
him home with you?
I almost said as my canine turned
indifferent eyes on me. “Yep. at’s Steve.”
Max giggled, the easily amused, infectious giggle of a
kid barely out of kindergarten. “Steve? at’s a funny
name.”
“You think so? How come?” I took a sip of my wine.
“Don’t you know any Steves? I have a friend named Steve.
And I went to school with a guy named Steve.”
He laughed harder and when his eyes crinkled with
mirth, he struck me as somehow familiar. “But he’s…” He
gestured at Steve, who hadn’t budged an inch since Max
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Georgia Beers
stood. “He’s a
dog.
” e way he said it, there was an
unspoken “duh” in his words.
“Well, what do you think his name should be?”
Max shrugged. “I don’t know, something…
something…doggie, you know? Like, like…Duke or Rover
or…something like that.”
Amusement enveloped me like a mist and suddenly
my annoyance at the intrusion was pushed back into a
corner. I wasn’t sure what it was about Max, but I found
him to be rather charming company. I used my chin to
point to a ratty rope toy that had been left in the corner of
the yard. “If you throw that, he might fetch it and bring it
back to you.”
“Really?” Only a small child could put such hope and
anticipation into one word the way Max did.
“Yep.” I crossed the yard and helped him hop over the
chicken wire. He ran right to the rope toy, Steve hot on his
heels. I returned to my seat to watch them. “Does your
mom know where you are?” I asked.
“Yeah.”
Of course I didn’t believe him, but we were within
shouting distance of his back door, so I let it go. I worked
on my ai and watched him play with Steve for a while.
When I was just about finished eating, I said to him, “Hey,
I make the best chocolate chip cookies around.”
“I
love
chocolate chip cookies!”
“Do you?” I held one out to him. “Here you go.”
Max turned to me, chewing. “Wow. is is really
good.”
ough I didn’t think that six years on this earth
warranted him to be any kind of cookie connoisseur, I was
still inexplicably flattered. “anks. Glad you like them.”
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We heard somebody call his name. Twin grimaces
crossed our faces. His because he didn’t want to leave Steve
and mine because I didn’t want to deal with Cindy. She
called again and Max looked at me. I gave him a shrug and
a half-grin.
“I’m over here,” he said loudly and—his inflection told
me—grudgingly.
I could hear footsteps brushing through the late-
spring grass a couple of yards down, and knew it was too
late to do anything but be neighborly. Bolstering myself
with a big breath and a bite of chocolate chip goodness, I
was ready. But when the figure finally came into view, I
nearly choked on my cookie, stunned into speechlessness.
Elena Walker—Smokin’ Hot Bank Manager, as Josh
liked to call her—stood on the other side of my chicken
wire fencing. “ere you are,” she said to Max, hands
parked on her hips.
“Hey, Mom,” Max said.
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CHAPTER SIX
If I found Elena Walker incredibly sexy in the
business suits she wore to the bank every day, it was an
enormous treat seeing her in worn jeans and a plain white,
long sleeve T-shirt with
Life Is Good
printed across the
front in faded green ink. Good Lord, was it ever. Her hair
was tousled and the color of blackstrap molasses. She had a
smudge of what I assumed might be newsprint along her
jawbone, and she looked absolutely exhausted.
She was the most invigorating sight I’d ever seen.
With her eyes on Max, she said to him, “Are you
bothering our neighbors?” but when she looked up and saw
me, her faced changed from gentle embarrassment to stark
surprise. “Ms. King,” spilled from her mouth.
“
Coach
King, Mom.
Coach
,” Max corrected.
“Wait, wait, wait.” Elena waved her hand in front of
her face as if trying to erase what she thought she knew.
“
You’re
Coach King? You coach Max’s tee-ball team?” e
corners of her mouth lifted in an easy smile, telling me she
liked that idea.
I’d managed to swallow my fortifying bite of cookie
without finding myself in need of the Heimlich maneuver,
and for that I was grateful. I stood up and crossed to where
she stood on the other side of the chicken wire. “Guilty as
charged,” I said, hoping I came across as charming, rather
Georgia Beers
than dorky as I suspected. “And…
you’re
his mother?” I tried
to phrase my question in the right tone so as to not be
insulting, but to let her know I was slightly confused.
“One of them. I think you’ve probably met Cindy.”
I nodded. Okay. Max had two mommies. Who knew?
I tried not to dwell on the one question that was certainly
going to torment me for the rest of the evening and
beyond: where the hell was the justice in this world when a
self-absorbed creep like Cindy Johnson could land a catch
like Elena Walker? It was
so
not fair.
Pulling myself back into the wonderful arena of small
talk, I rested my hand on Max’s head and noticed his hair
was exactly the same rich color as his mother’s. When he
glanced up, I realized his slightly almond-shaped eyes were
just like hers. No wonder he’d looked familiar to me. “He’s
got some potential,” I told her. “He tries really hard and
he’s a pretty good listener.”
e glance she favored him with was filled with equal
parts pride and love. “I’m glad to hear that. He’s always
been good about making an effort. e listening part? Not
so much.”
“Mom,” he said, drawing the word out to make it
sound like it had three syllables. He led Steve to a different
part of the yard, obviously wanting to be away from the
embarrassing adult talk.
Elena lifted her gaze back up to me and my heart did
a weird, triple-thump kind of thing in my chest. “I know
we see each other in the bank fairly often, but it’s a
pleasure to meet you officially, as neighbors.” She stuck her
hand out. “Elena Walker.”
I almost snorted. Like I didn’t know her name. “Avery
King.” Her skin was warm and soft and everything I
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thought it might be and I didn’t want to let go of her hand.
She held mine tightly and…for two or three seconds